FORECLOSURE PREVENTION SUGGESTIONS
This informative article gives suggestions for those borrowers who are having payment problems. This includes some great information and Web sites directed entirely to helping prevent needless foreclosures. You can know your options to determine the best possible outcome. This provides some useful resources that are available.
What Should Borrowers Do When They Need Help?
by Jack M. Guttentag
Featured on Yahoo Finance
An uncomfortably large proportion of my mail these days is from borrowers with serious payment problems. In most cases, I can’t help them for the reasons discussed below. With a few common cases, I try.
In one typical case, the borrower has two mortgages which add to an amount well in excess of the value of the property, and can no longer afford both payments. If the same lender holds both mortgages, and if the borrower can afford a reduced payment, his objective should be to persuade the mortgage lender to modify the notes to lower the payments.
The burden of proof is on the borrower. He has to document that he will be forced to default on the existing mortgages but could afford the payment on a new mortgage that would cost the lender less than foreclosure.
A Greater Challenge
If the second mortgage is held by a different lender, the challenge is greater.
The first mortgage lender is unlikely to modify the note so long as the second mortgage lender remains in a position to foreclose.
I suggest that borrowers in this situation approach the second mortgage lender first, with the objective of inducing that lender to get out of the way. The borrower can offer the second mortgage lender an unsecured promissory note for a portion of what is owed on the second mortgage. Since the second mortgage loan has little or no value except as a nuisance, any reasonable offer is likely to be accepted.
The situation described above is only one of many in which troubled borrowers may find themselves. Rarely do they communicate all the information that I would need to find the best possible outcome. Not all have second mortgages, but some have large amounts of non-mortgage debt to complicate the process. While many have negative equity in their properties, some have positive equity. In some cases a loss of income appears temporary, in other cases permanent; in some cases borrowers plan to dispose of the property, in other cases they want to hang on if possible.
A Best Possible Outcome
In principle, there is a “best possible outcome” for every individual situation, but only rarely do borrowers give me all the information I would need to find it, even if I had the time. Few borrowers know what their options might be, and fewer still understand the information they must provide before a best option can be identified. But some useful resources are available.
I have an article on my Web site called “Mortgage Payment Problems: What If You Can’t Pay?” It covers a wide range of possible situations in which borrowers may find themselves, and suggests the remedies that appear most relevant to each situation.
Recently, PMI Mortgage Insurance Company and Genworth Mortgage Insurance Company have developed Web sites directed entirely to helping prevent needless foreclosures. They cover much of the same ground as I do, but they do it better by breaking the problems down into bite-size pieces. Further, they include a number of videos that many people will find easier to follow than written expositions.
Warning: These sites are not easy to find through the main sites of the two companies. For the PMI site, go here. For Genworth, go here. Click on the menu item “Education and Training”.
These sites are for those who are prepared to invest the time needed to figure out what their options are; they will not hand-tailor a solution for them, but they will provide useful guidance nonetheless.
At a second site, Genworth takes a step toward providing hand-tailored solutions. They provide forms which, when filled out by borrowers, provide the raw materials from which hand-tailored solutions are derived. However, there is no automated assistant to generate solutions; instead the information is referred to a Genworth counselor who will do it manually. Unfortunately (but understandably), the counseling service is available only to borrowers whose lenders have mortgage insurance with Genworth.
That does not mean that this facility is useless for other borrowers in trouble. At some point, every borrower in trouble who expects help must pull together all the information about their financial situation that is relevant to a best possible outcome. If the intention is to go directly to the lender, providing this information at the outset will go a long way toward placing him at the top of the applicant pile rather than at the bottom.
I have been searching for a program that will automate the last step — that is, after the borrower enters all relevant information, it will produce a best possible outcome, for that borrower. While such programs exist, they have been developed for license to major players and I have not yet been able to shake one free for direct use by borrowers. But stay tuned.
SEARCH FOR BANK OWNED HOMES AT www.CentralValleyHomes.com
Carol Perdew
Prudential California Realty
(209) 239-7979
www.CentralValleyHomes.com
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Can you tell me who did your layout? I’ve been looking for one kind of like yours. Thank you.
Definition of Foreclosure on Default of Payment of Property Loans
Foreclosure is a legal term often on the minds of many American homeowners. The average American family works hard to afford a home in which their family can live comfortably. Most families do not have the cash up front to pay for their dream house in full. They will seek a loan from a financial lending institution such as a bank or a mortgage company to buy this home.
To secure the loan, these financial lending institutions must be certain that they will get back their money back. Since a good paying job does not guarantee that a loan of this magnitude will be paid back, they require what is known as collateral, an asset they can seize in lieu of payments if the loan is in default (no longer being paid back).
Normally the home that is being purchased with the loan is put up as collateral and if the mortgagor (person seeking the loan) does not pay back the loan to the mortgagee (money lender, borrower), the house goes into foreclosure. The money lending institution may obtain a court order to proceed with the foreclosure and repossess or seize the house in lieu of repayment of the loan.
In some instances the financial lending institution may attempt foreclosure on a home or other property, but if the borrower repays the loan, a court of equity may rule in favor of the borrower who at that point will be able to keep the home or property in question.
The contract between the financial lending company and the borrower is called a mortgage or deed of trust. When a contract has been entered, effectively the lending company has agreed to give the borrower a certain sum of money in which to purchase the said property. The borrower agrees to pay this money back (signs a promissory note). The contract will also stipulate that a lien will be placed on the property meaning that the financial lending company has a right to seize the property (repossess it) if the loan is not repaid in the time frame that is stipulated and according to the conditions set out in the contract.
The process of foreclosure is used in any contract whereby real estate, homes, farms, land, and other immovable property has been obtained through a mortgage, and the mortgage holder has defaulted on the payments.
Judicial Foreclosure is available in all the American states. When the borrower defaults on the loan, the property is sold. The proceeds from the sale of the property first goes to repay the balance on the existing loan, then to any other lien holders, and finally to the borrower if any proceeds are left over. All transactions are done legally through the court system.
Foreclosure by power of sale is sometimes added as a clause in the mortgage contract that defines the foreclosure procedure without court intervention. This procedure follows the same order as the Judicial Foreclosure however faster since the courts are not involved.
To read more and get Free copy on how to stop Foreclosure
Please follow this link.
http://mortgagedoubleplus.com